Chapter 16 - Respiratory System

Respiration:
The respiratory system consists of tubes that ______incoming air and ______it into
the microscopic alveoli where gases are ______.
What are the three processes of respiration?
Respiratory organs:
The organs of the respiratory tract can be divided into two groups: the upper respiratory tract (nose, nasal cavity,
sinuses, and pharynx), and the lower respiratory tract (larynx, trachea, bronchial tree, and lungs).
Nose:
The nose, supported by ______and cartilage, provides an entrance for air in which air is filtered by coarse
______inside the nostrils.
Nasal cavity:
The nasal cavity is a space posterior to the nose that is divided medially by the ______.
Nasal conchae:
What are they? What is their function?
Cilia:
Particles trapped in the mucus are pushed to the ______by ciliary action, swallowed, and carried to the
______where gastric juice destroys any microorganisms in the mucus.
Paranasal sinuses:
What four bones are they found in?
What is their function?
Pharynx:
The pharynx is a common passageway for ______and ______and it aids in producing
sounds for ______.
Larynx:
The larynx is an enlargement in the airway superior to the ______and inferior to the ______.
It helps keep particles from entering the trachea and also houses the vocal cords.
The larynx is composed of a framework of ______and ______bound by elastic tissue.
What is the largest cartilage called ? (hint it is known as the Adam’s apple).
Inside the larynx, two pairs of folds of muscle and connective tissue covered with mucous membrane make up the
______. What are the upper pair called?
What is their function?
What is the lower pair called?
Their function?
What is the triangular slit called where air passes through?
What closes this space off when swallowing?
Trachea:
The trachea extends downward anterior to the ______and into the thoracic cavity, where it splits into
right and left ______.
What is the inner wall lined with?
Why?
The tracheal wall is supported by 20 incomplete cartilaginous rings. Why are they incomplete and not complete?
Bronchial tree:
The bronchial tree consists of branched tubes leading from the ______to the ______.
The bronchial tree begins with the two primary ______, each leading to a lung.
Where do these lead?
How many are on each side?
What are the smallest branches of the bronchial tree called?
Do they have cartilage in their walls?
Where does the actual gas exchange take place?
Lungs:
The right and left soft, spongy, cone-shaped lungs are separated medially by the ______and are
enclosed by the ______and thoracic cage.
The bronchus and large blood vessels enter each lung.
A layer of serous membrane, the visceral ______, attached to the lung, folds back to form the
______.
The ______pleura lines the thoracic cavity; serous fluid lubricates the “pleura cavity” between these
two membranes.
Each lobe is composed of lobules that contain air passages, alveoli, nerves, blood vessels, lymphatic vessels, and
connective tissues
BREATHING:
______(breathing), the movement of air in and out of the lungs, is composed of 2 processes
called ______and ______.
Inspiration:
______pressure is the force that moves air into the lungs.
What happens when pressure on the inside of the lungs decreases?
Air pressure inside the lungs is decreased by ______the size of the thoracic cavity; due to
surface tension between the two layers of pleura, the lungs follow with the chest wall and ______.
What are the muscles involved in expanding the thoracic cavity?
What keeps the alveoli from sticking to each other?
Expiration:
The forces of expiration are due to the elastic ______of lung and muscle tissues and from the surface
tension within the alveoli.
Forced expiration is aided by ______and abdominal wall muscles that compress the abdomen
against the diaphragm.
Respiratory volumes:
The measurement of different air volumes is called ______and it describes four distinct respiratory
volumes.
Define each of the following volumes and capacities.
tidal volume: (TV)
inspiratory reserve volume: (IRV)
expiratory reserve volume: (ERV)
residual volume: (RV)
respiratory capacities:
vital capacity (VC):
inspiratory capacity:
functional residual capacity:
total lung capacity: (TLC)
anatomical dead space: never gets to lungs
RespiratoryControl:
Normal breathing is a rhythmic, involuntary act even though the muscles are under ______control.
respiratory center in ______& ______sends impulses to control
respiration. Controlled primarily by levels of ______in blood. Levels of ______
play only a minor role, (only when levels are extremely low).
List three things that affect breathing.
An inflation reflex, triggered by stretch receptors in the visceral pleura, bronchioles, and alveoli, helps to prevent
______of the lungs during forceful breathing.
Hyperventilation lowers the amount of ______in the blood.
Gas Exchange:
The ______are the only sites of gas exchange between the atmosphere and the blood.
They are tiny sacs clustered at the distal ends of the ______ducts.
The ______membrane consists of the epithelial cells of the alveolus, the endothelial cells of
the capillary, and the two fused basement membranes of these layers.
Gases diffuse from areas of ______pressure to areas of ______pressure.
In a mixture of gases, each gas accounts for a portion of the total pressure; the amount of pressure each gas exerts is
equal to its partial pressure.
When the partial pressure of oxygen is higher in the alveolar air than it is in the capillary blood, oxygen will diffuse
into the ______.
When the partial pressure of carbon dioxide is greater in the blood than in the alveolar air, carbon dioxide will diffuse
out of the ______and into the ______.
What factors favor increased diffusion?
O2 transport:
Over 98% of oxygen is carried in the blood bound to ______of red blood cells, producing
______. This chemical is unstable in areas where the concentration of oxygen is low, and
gives up its oxygen molecules in those areas.
More oxygen is released as the blood concentration of carbon dioxide increases, as the blood becomes more acidic, and
as blood temperature increases.
A deficiency of oxygen reaching the tissues is called ______and has a variety of causes.
CO2 transport:
Carbon dioxide may be transported ______in blood plasma, as ______, or as
______ions. Which is most common?
When carbon dioxide reacts with water in the plasma, ______acid is formed slowly, but instead much
of the carbon dioxide enters red blood cells, where the enzyme ______speeds this reaction.
The resulting acid dissociates immediately, releasing bicarbonate and hydrogen ions.

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